FAQ · SearchOffshore

What Is Economic Substance?

Economic substance requirements oblige companies incorporated in offshore jurisdictions to demonstrate genuine economic activity in that jurisdiction — including physical presence, locally based management, qualified employees and core income-generating activities performed locally. They were introduced across all major offshore jurisdictions from 2019 onwards in response to OECD/EU pressure on harmful tax practices.

The Full Answer

Economic Substance — What It Means in Practice

Prior to 2019, an offshore company could exist only on paper — a registered agent address, nominee directors and no genuine activity in the jurisdiction of incorporation — while claiming the benefits of that jurisdiction's tax position. The OECD BEPS project and EU Code of Conduct Group identified this as a form of harmful tax competition and required offshore jurisdictions to implement economic substance rules as a condition of remaining off blacklists.

Economic substance requirements apply to companies carrying out relevant activities, which typically include:

  • Banking and insurance
  • Fund management
  • Finance and leasing
  • Headquarters activities
  • Holding company activities
  • Intellectual property holding
  • Distribution and service centre activities
  • Shipping

To satisfy substance requirements, a company must demonstrate: it is directed and managed in the jurisdiction; an adequate number of qualified employees are physically present; adequate operating expenditure is incurred; appropriate physical assets are maintained; and core income-generating activities are performed locally. The specific tests vary by jurisdiction and by activity type.

Companies that fail substance tests face financial penalties and, critically, automatic exchange of information — the jurisdiction is required to notify the competent tax authority in the jurisdiction of the beneficial owners, which may trigger a tax investigation.

A pure equity holding company — one that simply holds shares in subsidiaries and receives dividends — generally has a reduced substance test in most offshore jurisdictions: it must be managed and controlled locally, maintain company records locally and comply with filing obligations. It does not need employees or significant physical assets. However, "managed and controlled locally" requires genuine board decisions to be made in the jurisdiction — not rubber-stamped by nominee directors following instructions from the beneficial owner elsewhere.

Related Questions

Economic Substance — Further Questions

All major offshore financial jurisdictions have implemented economic substance requirements, including BVI, Cayman Islands, Jersey, Guernsey, Isle of Man, Bahamas, Bermuda, Anguilla, Turks and Caicos and Seychelles. Onshore low-tax jurisdictions such as Singapore, Luxembourg and UAE have their own substance requirements as a condition of accessing treaty benefits and participation exemptions. In practice, no major offshore jurisdiction is now free of some form of substance requirement for entities carrying out relevant activities.
A company that is genuinely dormant — carrying out no relevant activities, earning no income and holding no assets other than perhaps a bank account — generally falls outside the scope of substance requirements in most jurisdictions, as it has no relevant activity to be tested against. However, once the company begins to carry out a relevant activity or earn income from one, substance requirements become applicable. Entities should take local legal advice on whether their specific circumstances bring them within the substance regime.
Companies file annual substance notifications to the relevant authority (e.g. CIMA in Cayman, BVI FSC in BVI, JFSC in Jersey). The authority assesses whether the company meets the relevant test for its activity type. If it fails, it is subject to a graduated penalty regime: initial financial penalties, then higher penalties for continued failure, and ultimately — if the failure is ongoing — automatic exchange of information with the competent tax authority in the beneficial owner's country of residence. The exchange of information requirement is the most significant enforcement lever, as it effectively informs the home-country tax authority that a structure may not have genuine substance in its claimed jurisdiction.

Find Substance Compliance Specialists

Browse corporate service providers across Cayman, BVI, Jersey, Guernsey and all major offshore jurisdictions.


YMYL Compliance
What we are — and what we are not

SearchOffshore is a directory and information platform. It is important to understand what this means:

SearchOffshore is not a law firm, financial advisor, or tax consultant. Nothing on this platform constitutes legal, financial, tax or investment advice.
We verify firm existence and standing — we do not verify the quality of their advice. Conduct your own due diligence before engaging any professional.
The presence of a firm in our directory does not imply endorsement of that firm's services, advice, or suitability for your needs.
Offshore structures must comply with the tax and regulatory requirements of your home jurisdiction. Always obtain qualified legal and tax advice.